Page:Selected Poems (Huxley).djvu/62

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II.

Mottled and grey and brown they pass,
The wood-moths, wheeling, fluttering;
And we chase and they vanish; and in the grass
Are starry flowers, and the birds sing
Faint broken songs of the dying spring.
  And on the beech-hole, smooth and grey,
  Some lover of an older day
Has carved in time-blurred lettering
    One world only:—"Alas."


III.

Lutes, I forbid you! You must never play,
  When shimmeringly, glimpse by glimpse
Seen through the leaves, the silken figures sway
In measured dance. Never at shut of day,
  When Time perversely loitering limps
  Through endless twilights, should your strings
  Whisper of light remembered things
That happened long ago and far away:
Lutes, I forbid you! You must never play. . . .